Early Retirement Calculator
Find your FIRE number and the years until you can retire early.
⏰ What is FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early)?
FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early - a movement focused on extreme saving and investing to achieve financial independence far before traditional retirement age. The core concept is simple: if your investment portfolio generates enough passive income to cover all your living expenses, you no longer need to work for money. The portfolio size that achieves this is called the FIRE number.
The FIRE number is most commonly calculated using the 4% rule: multiply your annual expenses by 25. If you spend $50,000 per year, your FIRE number is $1,250,000. A portfolio of that size, invested in a diversified mix of stocks and bonds, has historically supported a 4% annual withdrawal (inflation-adjusted) for at least 30 years in nearly all historical market conditions. For early retirees with a 40–50 year horizon, many advocates use a more conservative 3–3.5% withdrawal rate, translating to a 28–33x multiplier.
The path to FIRE depends primarily on your savings rate - the percentage of after-tax income you save and invest. A 10% savings rate might take 40+ years; a 50% savings rate can achieve FIRE in under 20 years from a zero start. This calculator models both the FIRE number and the years to reach it, accounting for compound growth of existing savings and regular contributions.
📐 FIRE Calculation Formula
The FIRE Number formula derives from the safe withdrawal rate - the percentage of a portfolio you can withdraw each year without depleting it. Dividing annual expenses by the SWR gives the portfolio size needed. The years-to-FIRE formula solves for the time it takes a portfolio, growing at rate r with annual contributions, to reach the FIRE Number. The current savings balance accelerates the timeline as it already has a head start on compounding.
📖 How to Use This Calculator
Steps
💡 Example Calculations
Example 1 - 30-Year-Old with 30% Savings Rate
Income = $80,000 | Savings Rate = 30% | Current Savings = $50,000 | Expenses = $56,000 | SWR = 4% | Return = 7%
Example 2 - High Savings Rate FIRE (50%)
Income = $100,000 | Savings = 50% | Current Savings = $0 | Expenses = $50,000 | SWR = 3.5% | Return = 7%
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
🔗 Related Calculators
What is the FIRE number?
The FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) number is the portfolio size at which you can sustainably live off investment returns without working. It is calculated as: FIRE Number = Annual Expenses / Safe Withdrawal Rate. Using the standard 4% SWR: FIRE Number = Annual Expenses × 25. For example, if your annual spending is $50,000, your FIRE number is $1,250,000.
What is the 4% safe withdrawal rate?
The 4% rule (or Bengen Rule) comes from a 1994 study by financial planner William Bengen, who found that a portfolio invested in 50/50 stocks and bonds could sustain a 4% annual withdrawal rate for at least 30 years through any historical market cycle. For early retirees with a 40–50 year horizon, many experts recommend 3–3.5% to account for longer time periods and sequence-of-returns risk.
How does savings rate affect early retirement?
Savings rate is the most powerful variable in early retirement planning. Starting from $0: a 10% savings rate takes about 43 years to reach FIRE; a 25% rate takes about 32 years; a 50% rate takes about 17 years; a 75% rate takes about 7 years. The math works because a higher savings rate both accelerates portfolio growth and reduces the expenses you need to cover - lowering your FIRE number simultaneously.
What are the different types of FIRE?
LeanFIRE: retire on a very frugal budget (typically under $25,000/year). FatFIRE: retire with a generous lifestyle (often $100,000+/year). BaristaFIRE: semi-retire with part-time work covering basic expenses while the portfolio continues growing. CoastFIRE: reach a portfolio large enough that, with no further contributions, it will reach full FIRE by a target age through compounding alone.
Do I need to account for inflation in early retirement planning?
Yes. Most FIRE calculations use real (inflation-adjusted) returns - typically 5–7% nominal returns minus 2–3% inflation = 3–5% real return. The 4% SWR historically accounts for inflation by adjusting withdrawals upward each year with inflation. For this calculator, if you use a real return rate (subtract inflation), the FIRE number and timeline already account for inflation maintenance.
What is the FIRE movement?
FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early. The goal is to accumulate a corpus large enough that investment returns cover all living expenses indefinitely. Most FIRE followers target 25x annual expenses based on the 4% safe withdrawal rule. Variants include Lean FIRE (minimalist lifestyle), Fat FIRE (higher income target), and Barista FIRE (partial retirement with part-time income).
How much do I need to retire at 40 in India?
Using the 4% rule with a 50-year retirement horizon and 6% inflation, a conservative corpus = 30x annual expenses. At Rs 60,000/month (Rs 7.2 lakh/year), you need Rs 2.16 crore minimum. A safer target at Indian inflation rates is 33-40x expenses. This calculator shows your required corpus and how long your current savings rate takes to reach it.
What is the biggest risk in early retirement?
Sequence-of-returns risk: poor market performance in the first 5-10 years of retirement can permanently damage your corpus, even if long-run returns are fine. Early retirees have more years for this to occur. Mitigation: keep 2-3 years of expenses in cash/FDs, use a flexible withdrawal rate (reduce in bad years), and maintain some income source in early retirement years.